We arrived in Corsica (an island that is part of France) by ferry from Nice to Bastia. We stayed just outside Bastia in the small coastal town of Erbalunga. This was one of my favorites of the places we stayed in Corsica. The hotel had nice gardens, the ocean was close by, and there was a patisserie (bakery) across the street.

The first morning I looked out the window and saw there was a nice sunrise, but by the time we got going it was ending. The next two mornings I got out earlier to catch it. Of course, that meant I took a ton of sunrise photos!

The morning light was also nice on the old buildings.

As usual, I loved the details of light and color and pattern.

The stone tiled roofs (common) must be heavy, but the shingles wouldn't wear out!

We spent a scenic day driving around Cap Corse, the peninsula on the north west end of Corsica.

The Genoans (who ruled Corsica from 1284 to 1755) built a lot of round towers all over Corsica to defend against North African (Barbary) pirates. The new wind turbines made an interesting contrast with the old towers.

We even managed to find a few wineries to visit :-) One of the common grapes is Neilluccio, which is either indigenous to Corsica or else identical to Sangiovese from Italy. (you'd think DNA would tell?) Regardless, they make some nice wines with it. Most of the wine is red or rose, not much white. The rose were a beautiful orange / peach color.

There were lots of small hillside villages, each with at least one church, and often with cemeteries with elaborate mausoleums.

We even spotted paragliders in several places, including these ones near Saint Florent. They launched from the ridge behind them on the right and landed on the beach.

After our paragliding tour we took the train from Salzburg back to Vienna, left our paragliders in storage, picked up our backpacking gear and headed for Corsica with a brief stop in Nice, France. Unfortunately, it rained a lot, but it was still interesting to see a different part of France. (I'd only been to Paris and the French alps before.) The buildings have lots of balconies with metal railings that reminded me a little of New Orleans. And pastel colors that we don't tend to see in our cities.

As usual, I enjoyed the smaller passageways in the old town, and details that catch my eye.

I'd recently read (if that's the right word) a book of photographs of reflections (Chasing Reflections by Eli Reinholdtsen). They were reflections in windows and puddles, very different reflections than my usual light on water ones. So after all the rain, with water everywhere, I tried a few in that style.

The pigeons were also taking advantage of the puddles to have a bath.

The other common city birds were the collared doves. Interestingly, these only spread from Asia to Europe in the last 70 years. I wonder what triggered their dispersion?

Despite it being autumn, there were still quite a few flowers around (at least, compared to Saskatoon!)

Of course, I found some abstract subjects as well.

Thankfully, the sun came out in the afternoon. Lots of people came out on the waterfront and beach.

From Nice we took the ferry to the island of Corsica, passing the city state of Monaco (where Monte Carlo is), the second smallest country in the world. (the smallest is the Vatican)

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

I was wandering in the gardens at our hotel A Cheda near Bonifacio, Corsica taking photos when I was excited to notice a hummingbird hawk-moth feeding on the flowers. This was the first one I've seen. (This is a European/Asian species but there are similar ones in North America.)

It is amazingly similar to a hummingbird (convergent evolution), hovering over flowers to feed and zipping between them. I didn't notice but apparently they even make a "humming" noise.

I had my camera ready, but even then it was hard to catch since it didn't sit still for very long. I managed a few decent shots: